I want to open this topic up for discussion after declaring my own view that might ruffle a feather or three.
I’ve been stewing over this notion about boycotting Donald Trump’s inauguration on Friday. Several dozen Democratic lawmakers say they aren’t going to attend the inaugural out of protest over Trump’s election to the presidency.
I’m not comfortable with that notion.
I’m going to launch my own mini-boycott Friday. I’ll watch the new president’s inaugural speech, but I’m going to forgo the rest of it: the parade, the pageantry, the balls, the “first dance.” I am just a schmuck out here in Flyover Country who is not elected to a public office that is part of a federal government that sets laws for everyone to follow.
A Democratic boycott of a Republican president’s inaugural seems, to my way of thinking, to miss the point about what these inaugurals are all about. They aren’t about the individual who is elected president; they are about the office. We salute the office and the principles on which it was founded.
The inaugural is meant to honor democratic tradition, not Democratic politics.
Do I wish someone else had been elected president? Sure I do. But here’s another point: That other person I supported — Hillary Rodham Clinton — is going to attend the inaugural with her husband, the former president. She’ll be on the podium. She’ll stand and applaud when the new president takes the oath. If anyone had reason to boycott, I think it would be her.
Those who detest the president don’t have to applaud. They can keep their hands warm by sticking them in their pockets.
This event Friday isn’t about Donald Trump; it certainly isn’t about those who are boycotting the event. It’s about the presidency, which is going to keep on functioning the moment the chief justice tells Donald J. Trump, “Congratulations, Mr. President.”
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Let me know what you think. Those of you who see this on Facebook likely will comment on that social medium. Feel free to comment on High Plains Blogger as well.
I don’t think anyone will change my mind. Nor do I think I’ll change anyone else’s mind, either.